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Killing Rommel - The Demise of the Desert Fox 

Mark Felton Productions
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What were the circumstances that led to the death of Germany's most famous WW2 general, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel? Get the full story here.
Dr. Mark Felton is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
Visit my audio book channel 'War Stories with Mark Felton': • One Thousand Miles to ...
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Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
Credits: TCY; Wald-Burger; US National Archives; Bundesarchiv

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7 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 6 тыс.   
@smythharris2635
@smythharris2635 2 года назад
Rommel's son, Manfred, had a fine career in politics and maintained friendships with Patton's son and Montgomery's son.
@notsosilentmajority1
@notsosilentmajority1 2 года назад
Really? That's very interesting. Thank you for the information.
@BillinHungary
@BillinHungary 2 года назад
Indeed, Manfred was the mayor of Stuttgart for 22 years.
@alphalunamare
@alphalunamare 2 года назад
@@BillinHungary a city twinned with Cardiff.
@darrenchang2907
@darrenchang2907 2 года назад
And their great grand children played War of Thunder together from time to time...
@Masterhitman935
@Masterhitman935 2 года назад
@@darrenchang2907 nice ( ◠‿◠ )
@josephoshea1442
@josephoshea1442 2 года назад
As you pointed out, by choosing suicide, Rommel protected his family from further Nazi persecution. This included his son, Manfred, a teenaged soldier in the Luftwaffenhelfer. After the war, Manfred would go on to a political career, serving as mayor of Stuttgart from 1974 to 1996. He also befriended sons of two of his father's Allied opponents, George Patton and Bernard Montgomery, further cementing German-British-American post-war friendship.
@johnstirling9358
@johnstirling9358 Год назад
Sadly, Col David Stirling never met Manfred Rommel in the years following the war. Much the shame as it was Field Marshall Rommel who gave David Stirling the title of 'The Phantom Major'. Regards, John Stirling
@ravenbrown74
@ravenbrown74 11 месяцев назад
Have you ever thought that the USASSHOLES were behind all this from day one
@snfab1
@snfab1 10 месяцев назад
wonderful to know that 👍👍
@4fthell
@4fthell 7 месяцев назад
It's crazy that Rommel's kid becomes friends with George Patton's kid.
@robertcottam8824
@robertcottam8824 4 месяца назад
Hmmm. I never new that Patton ever commanded against Rommel - and I’ve been researching for a lot of years. Who won?
@bufnyfan1
@bufnyfan1 2 года назад
I had the chance to take care of the nurse who looked after Rommel after his staff car was strafed in France and he almost died. She immigrated to Canada after the war and showed me some of the letters that she received from his wife/son thanking her for the care of General Rommel during his hospital stay and subsequent convalescence.
@BFP2021
@BFP2021 2 года назад
Thats high class! Remembering to write thank you notes to the nurses who cared for you when you were injured in war.
@Au60schild
@Au60schild 2 года назад
@@BFP2021 Frau Rommel's writing of thankful letters to General Rommel's nurse was not uncommon in the first half or so of the 20th century amongst those of honor raised in a dignified class. After the early sixties, all pretense of dignity went out the window as the plurality if not majority of the world, for the most part, but certainly so in the U.S. became the undignified "me-me-me" generations which followed. Reference Hunter Biden and no, I am an apolitical independent disgusted by society's profound decline.
@roryobrien4401
@roryobrien4401 2 года назад
@@thewayback2920 I agree, Felton is a good choice.
@johnstirling9524
@johnstirling9524 Год назад
I was introduced to Manfred Rommel when I worked in Germany in the 70's. We met on a number of occasions in Stuttgart, in what was then West Germany. My opinion of Manfred Rommel was that of a very open individual. We talked at length about his father, and in particular about the events surrounding the attack on the staff car carrying his father on the 17th July 1944 in Normandy. The definitive facts to as who it was that attacked Field Marshall Rommel's Staff Car were conveyed to his son by his father during his days in recovery after the event. Regardless, Manfred remained frustrated by the various claims being made that the attack on his father's Staff car was carried out by the Americans, South Africans, British, New Zealanders or Canadians. Of great personal interest, Manfred also conveyed that it was his father who named Col. David Stirling 'The Phantom Major'. Sadly, David Stirling and Manfred Rommel never met in the years following the War. Manfred died some years back but he left a legacy well remembered as the Mayor of Stuttgart. Kind regards. John Stirling
@ethics3
@ethics3 Год назад
@@thewayback2920 Rule number one..... When a Canadian leaves a comment , you can be pretty sure its bull crap. Take it from a very old Canadian. You can't trust a word they say. Just look at when they leave these grandiose comments. Do you EVER see them respond to inquiries like yours sir ? I have traveled all over Canada , from sea to sea to sea and this is one of the traits Canadians all seem to have in common...that being an all encompassing pretense to dishonesty and being two faced . Even when i traveled 1/2 a world away and a Canadian came across me , it was the same ...
@phil-sv1on
@phil-sv1on 2 года назад
He really was the best German general. Many senior German officers were jealous of him and slandered him after the war. In April 1944 he said. "If you think they will arrive in good weather, taking the shortest route, and give you advance warning, you are mistaken... The Allies will land in terrible weather, taking the longest route... The landing will take place here in Normandy, and this day will be the longest day." The best one.
@toms9864
@toms9864 Год назад
Rommel lost at El Alamein, Tunisia and Normandy. You believe he is the best German general.
@phil-sv1on
@phil-sv1on Год назад
@@toms9864 Of course, the best. He was a master in the use of the panzerdivisionen. A natural genius of the blitzkrieg. He already made a name for himself with a daring move in 1917 on the Italian front which led to a very impressive victory. It was in his blood. The defeats you mention were due to a huge disparity of means. In Normandy he inflicted humiliating defeats on Montgomery. His defensive tactics were taken up by NATO to deal with the Warsaw Pact threat. A strategic and tactic genius corresponding well to Napoleon's pragmatic view of war as "an art made of execution". The Allies, especially the Westerners, only won the war against the Germans because they had infinitely superior means. The so-called "Rommel myth", which has been in vogue in the media recently, is in fact an unfounded myth. He really was the best. Even better than Guderian or von Manstein.
@toms9864
@toms9864 Год назад
@@phil-sv1on "The Allies, especially the Westerners, only won the war against the Germans because they had infinitely superior means." You can say the Germans only did well at the beginning of the war because they were preparing for six years so all their equipment was modern and their troops were trained. When they lost air superiority their military was mediocre.
@warrenlewis3977
@warrenlewis3977 Год назад
@@toms9864 The Germans lost every major campaign but the have a strong mystique about them.
@toms9864
@toms9864 Год назад
@@warrenlewis3977 It was a German general that wrote the history on the European battles which is one of the reason why we hear so much more about the early part of WWII when Germans were having success.
@Roller_Ghoster
@Roller_Ghoster 2 года назад
This is the type of history channel that a WW2 nut like myself loves.
@par576
@par576 2 года назад
And that a WW2 survivor loves!
@1Gaumer
@1Gaumer 2 года назад
It’s like the history channel before it became garbage.
@johnsmith1474
@johnsmith1474 2 года назад
The shallow type?
@dogcopter2606
@dogcopter2606 2 года назад
i know right! its so good
@Lerxstification
@Lerxstification 2 года назад
Rommel once said, "If I had one days worth of the supplies wasted away on the OstFront, I'd conquer all of Africa and more!"
@olefella7561
@olefella7561 2 года назад
The fact that we get free documentaries on RU-vid by Dr Mark Felton is truly a gift 👍
@travelinman70
@travelinman70 2 года назад
Don't jinx that!!! SHHHHHHHhhhhh
@alitlweird
@alitlweird 2 года назад
I would love it if Mark put out all of his videos on a DVD series. I’d buy the set
@MrYorickJenkins
@MrYorickJenkins 2 года назад
Not especially. They are over dramatised and superficial in my opinion.
@scoldedcat
@scoldedcat 2 года назад
Although, he is asking for financial support.
@ntatemohlomi2884
@ntatemohlomi2884 2 года назад
@@MrYorickJenkins you mean they are not boring? Wouldn't watch some dreary academic presentation me.
@thesexybrownman
@thesexybrownman 2 года назад
My grandfather fought as a member of the British Indian Army in Montgomery’s Eighth Army in North Africa and Italy. At one point his regiment got separated from their white British counterparts and were surrounded by the Afrika Korps. They were about to all be executed when Rommel arrived at the last moment and spared all their lives, allowing them to rejoin their comrades. My grandfather always spoke with deep respect for Rommel, as he saved his life.
@dovetonsturdee7033
@dovetonsturdee7033 2 года назад
One thing everyone accepts about the North African campaign was that it was fought 'cleanly.' No such executions ever took place.
@tommy6905
@tommy6905 Год назад
Integrity is not good or bad, it is a way of life. RIP General and blessings to the sexy brown man from a pink guy, Ishwar now and forever.
@a3elatusmadara604
@a3elatusmadara604 Год назад
​@@tommy6905you mean field marshal
@tommygrubbs2053
@tommygrubbs2053 9 месяцев назад
Lmfao surrrrrre that happened lol
@juniorjames3256
@juniorjames3256 9 месяцев назад
Wow
@internetstrangerstrangerofweb
@internetstrangerstrangerofweb 2 года назад
Okay but for real, this new information found in 2018 has absolutely blown me away. I was under the impression that Rommel completely disassociated himself with Valkyrie's participants, but SEEING HIM IN A PHOTO WITH THE PLOTTERS was an AMAZING piece of history. I can't believe I didnt see this earlier, THANK YOU FOR YET ANOTHER BRILLIANT VIDEO, MARK!
@RW4X4X3006
@RW4X4X3006 2 года назад
Read somewhere recently, members of Rommel's staff were in contact with SHAEF though the OSS. So yeah, he was looking for a path to stop the war on the western front.
@rimshot2270
@rimshot2270 2 года назад
He didn't want to murder Hitler. He wanted him to be ousted by a coup and arrested. That was not feasible.
@haroldalston3349
@haroldalston3349 Год назад
What do you mean ,because he's in a photo don't mean he was part of the plot.Rommel refused to join valkyrie
@gonczoltomi7824
@gonczoltomi7824 Год назад
@@haroldalston3349 He wasn't involved directly, he knew of it, and he knew of the assasination too, he wasn't really supportive of this, but he didn't really mind either, cuz he knew in late 1944 that Hitler is completely idiot in terms of military.
@stevem2323
@stevem2323 Год назад
@@haroldalston3349 But he was, not directly but he was ready to help.
@meganegbert8570
@meganegbert8570 2 года назад
My great uncle destroyed a dozen of Rommel’s tanks in North Africa during the war. He was the worst mechanic the Afrika Korps ever had
@AA-bz1pr
@AA-bz1pr 2 года назад
Okay ngl, that was pretty good
@thomascrowley9122
@thomascrowley9122 2 года назад
🤣
@lewisticknor
@lewisticknor 2 года назад
Awesome!
@christianpethukov8155
@christianpethukov8155 2 года назад
Had me in the first half, ngl.
@raypurchase801
@raypurchase801 2 года назад
My uncle fought with the 8th Army. My uncle also fought with the French Foreign Legion and the Royal Navy. He couldn't go into a military bar ANYWHERE without getting the crap beaten out of him.
@benpatsy2076
@benpatsy2076 2 года назад
My Grandad was a desert rat and he got gunned across his legs and was captured by Rommel. He escaped from the prison, but had to hand himself back in because his legs became infected. Despite escaping they still treated him well and sorted out his infections.
@fredgarv79
@fredgarv79 2 года назад
I think this was fairly normal in that theater of the war. they respected each other, just as the pilots in the battle of britian did.
@rooseveltdarbey9493
@rooseveltdarbey9493 2 года назад
Wow amazing story
@dracomalfoy1784
@dracomalfoy1784 2 года назад
@@rooseveltdarbey9493 it's satire
@johnduffy6992
@johnduffy6992 2 года назад
nice..
@johnduffy6992
@johnduffy6992 2 года назад
desert is truly a lonely place...
@liverpoolscottish6430
@liverpoolscottish6430 2 года назад
Rommel's open refusal to implement the notorious Kommando Order issued by Hitler speaks volumes about his sense of honour. A superb soldier and a decent man. I knew a Desert Rat veteran who served as a Captain in Churchill's old cavalry Regt- 7th Hussars. Tom was an ardent admirer of Rommel, and had a great deal of respect for German soldiers. He once quipped to me, "The only officer more popular than Montgomery with the men of the 8th Army, was Rommel!"
@jonnyqwst
@jonnyqwst 2 года назад
I was a soldier in the US army stationed in Germany for most of the nineties. In an NCO academy in Baumholder, one of the classrooms had a quote from rommel and attributed to him, that every ounce of sweat in training avoids spilling a gallon of blood in battle, or thereabouts. Decades after the war’s end, my army thought highly enough of Rommel to add his principles as a guide to better soldiering.
@abhisheknuwan320
@abhisheknuwan320 2 года назад
Rommel is ofcourse the most respected general of the allies
@tavish4699
@tavish4699 2 года назад
Rommels infantry attacks priciples have been 1 to 1 copied into the us army manual
@mattgibbs5252
@mattgibbs5252 2 года назад
There are lots of World War II channels on RU-vid and Mark Felton's stands out because of his crisp diction and steady but pacy delivery. We might have seen the newsreel footage and images elsewhere but Mark with his intriguing research and masterful storytelling creates documentaries which always bring a surprise. Thank you, sir, for your information, education and fascinating viewing.
@demef758
@demef758 2 года назад
I could not agree more. I subscribe to several YT channels, but Mark's newest videos are the only ones that I routinely wait for and immediately watch.
@charleshmansfield5786
@charleshmansfield5786 2 года назад
Well said, Matt Gibbs, well said.
@stevemolina8801
@stevemolina8801 2 года назад
Well Said Sir!
@themadsnowballer
@themadsnowballer 2 года назад
What are some other good ones?
@e-curb
@e-curb 2 года назад
@@themadsnowballer Subscribe to this channel and look at the extensive library of former videos created by Dr. Felton.
@mg2699
@mg2699 2 года назад
I talked to an old man in a Bar in avillage close to me and he told me that Rommel had asked him how he was doing when he visited his unit one day, that’s when he told Rommel that one of his comrades had fallen a day earlier so Rommel asked what he could do for the man and he just wanted a pack of cigarettes so Rommel actually got him one. This man actually started crying when he talked about Rommel that’s how much this meant to him
@nutpeg6915
@nutpeg6915 2 года назад
What a legend.
@vegitoblue5000
@vegitoblue5000 2 года назад
As if I am going to believe someone with a swastika in his profile picture.
@internetbodhi1009
@internetbodhi1009 2 года назад
@@vegitoblue5000 dude, no one cares of you believe it or not, you really don't need to announce it
@dannymcnamara2554
@dannymcnamara2554 2 года назад
@@internetbodhi1009 👍🏻
@WinstonSmith1997
@WinstonSmith1997 2 года назад
I love the pfp and your sense of humor!
@jackcloud4728
@jackcloud4728 2 года назад
This was no end for such a man. Having the respect of your enemies is possibly the highest honour a general can have
@denissullivan4639
@denissullivan4639 2 года назад
How busy must he have been as a Field Marshall but yet found the time almost daily from North Africa, to write letters, sometimes only a sentences or two, to his wife. His wife preserved over a thousand of these letters. How could you not respect such a family man.
@jasonkinzie8835
@jasonkinzie8835 2 года назад
My grandfather fought in Africa. His unit was captured and he spent the rest of the war as a POW on a farm in Germany. Before this happened Rommel came out and talked to them, reassuring them that they would be well treated. My grandfather was impressed and always thought highly of Rommel after that.
@davidrenton
@davidrenton 2 года назад
Rommel was known for that apparently , he would have lunch with Captured Allied Senior Officer's, discuss the War, Politics, Culture etc. They all said he was very polite and not like the majority of Senior German staff.
@petercastles5978
@petercastles5978 2 года назад
The battles around Tobruk (1941)between the German/Italian troops and the Australian/Indian Infantry has been recorded as a "war without hate". Rommel's own men said he was a stickler for correct behavior, "no piggy business". I admire him for that.
@Sonderbarr
@Sonderbarr 2 года назад
@@davidrenton Hilarius - like these guys knew what "the majority of Senior German staff" was like.
@stronkserbia444
@stronkserbia444 2 года назад
your grandfather thought highly of a man taking orders from a freak like hitler..... you should be embarrassed
@johnrogers9481
@johnrogers9481 2 года назад
Stronk Serbia. Jeeze..at the time every human had to play their part in events bigger than anyone. No matter a situation we will still access any humanity shown by any other human.
@SGS04RF
@SGS04RF 2 года назад
I just recently learned that my grandfather served in the Africa Corps with Rommel as a truck driver. Before the war he was a poor cow farmer from a small village. He was captured in 1943 in Tunisia and moved to Texas as a POW. He returned to Germany in 1947. My dad was born in 1952. Luckily he survived otherwise I wouldn't be on this planet.
@hambam7533
@hambam7533 2 года назад
Glad it work out for you by the way i am part German as many are in the US
@sharpsvilleBill
@sharpsvilleBill 2 года назад
My Grandfather fought at Leningrad with the German Wehrmacht. He survived by hiding in a hollow tree before making his way back through Russian soldiers to the German line. He was shot and hospitalized multiple times. I saw what little of his paperwork and emblems survived before my sister lost them in a move.
@tysondolan1533
@tysondolan1533 2 года назад
Thanks for posting that. My Grandfather was shot in the face by a Japanese sniper on the island of Peleliu...I too wouldn't be here if he had not survived.
@dicebed
@dicebed 2 года назад
Yes - there were a lot of German POW camps in Texas and Oklahoma during the war - my family is from Oklahoma and my grandfather worked part-time in a POW camp, tending horses for the guards and building/repairing the fences - he got to know some of the POWs and said, most of them were just small time farmers, just like he was. If they spoke English, they would talk about growing up in the country on a farm, and how hard the work was. One of them knew some blacksmithing, so he made my grandfather a fireplace poker, out of iron rebar - I still have and use that poker in my fireplace.
@DarkMatterX1
@DarkMatterX1 2 года назад
@@dicebed Legitimately cool story bro
@glennkathrynclark7983
@glennkathrynclark7983 Год назад
Really appreciate these amazing videos. My father was a desert rat who fought against Rommel, and told us repeatedly that Rommel was well respected by himself and his fellow allied soldiers. My father was injured and captured in the notorious Breakout at Minqar Qa'im on 25 June 1942. Rommel was furious at the brutal tactics used in the breakout and intended to summarily execute all prisoners, however was eventually talked out of that action. For that humane concession, I too have respect for the Desert Fox, my father being sent to a hospital in Piacenza, Italy where he recovered from his injuries (although became a POW in Czekhoslovakia, eventually enduring an 800 mile "death march", ending in liberation by the US troops in Bavaria. These videos help me appreciate what my father experienced in North Africa (he died when I was 21 and like so many others, I never got to talk with him about the reality of his experience.
@ursulascholten7438
@ursulascholten7438 8 месяцев назад
My Father was in the African Korps under General Rommel. He always maintained the highest respect for him, visited his graveside in Herrlingen at least 3 times during his lifetime. My Dad said that his soldiers would have done everything for him. They held him in highest regards.
@davidgrainger5994
@davidgrainger5994 2 года назад
I knew Charlie before he was killed in a car accident a few years ago on his way to go flying in a Harvard. He was definitely the one who hit Rommel. He didn’t brag about it, he just described to me that day and his fortuitous attack. Wonderful guy, he has been missed in the aviation community in Canada.
@johnstirling9358
@johnstirling9358 Год назад
Hi David, agree, it was Charlie Fox who hit the Staff car carrying Field Marshall Erwin Rommel . Manfred Rommel, Field Marshall Rommel's son some years later recounted the event as told to him by his father during his father's recovery period in hospital following the attack. Regards, John Stirling
@Prophetofthe8thLegion
@Prophetofthe8thLegion Год назад
I don’t mean to be rude all respects to the guy but isn’t that death a little…ironic?
@mattstorm6568
@mattstorm6568 Год назад
Well gee lets all thank Charlie for taking out the guy who possibly could've saved millions of lives on all sides.
@juliuscaesar564
@juliuscaesar564 7 месяцев назад
@@mattstorm6568 he couldnt have saved anyone lets be honest, he might have been an absolute military genius but he was still a nazi
@RtB68
@RtB68 5 месяцев назад
Ohhh, please. That's a bit rich. @@mattstorm6568
@jonhill7729
@jonhill7729 2 года назад
I can add a small footnote to the Afrika Korps story. In 1968 I went on a summer tour of Europe with a couple of fellow students from the Univ. of Florida. In Hamburg we pooled our money and bought a used German Ford Taunus station wagon that we drove all over western Europe. While traveling through the beautifully scenic Bavarian Alps one afternoon we came upon a picturesque gastehaus (roadside tavern) and decided to stop in for a snack and some good German beer. Imagine our surprise when, upon opening the front door, we were confronted with a room full of middle-aged Germans wearing WWII desert campaign uniforms, which we recognized immediately from films about the desert war. We noticed that some were missing various body parts as well. It was as if we had just wandered onto a movie set. But they were all laughing, swing steins of beer about and singing some of the old Wehrmacht songs. We froze, wondering if it was a good idea us to be there, given their painful history and our being associated with the other side. So we moved quietly to a small table in a far corner, hoping not to be noticed as obviously American (blue jeans, etc.) But within just a few minutes a waiter walked over with a tray of beer steins and some dark bread. One of our group spoke a little German and told that waiter it was a mistake, that we had not yet ordered anything. The waiter laughed and said, "Yes I know, but they realize you are Americans and want you to feel welcome here." That's when it dawned on me that the losing side also had it's veterans' associations too and that we had stumbled into a reunion of Rommel's fabled Afrika Korps. And they clearly honored Rommel's code of ethics for treating the opposing side with respect and hospitality. Long story short, we spent a very memorable afternoon drinking steins of beer, laughing, back-slapping and learning some of the popular songs of the their day (Lilly Marlene is the only one I can remember now). Some of them who spoke English gladly shared stories of their adventures during the war and of their great respect for Rommel, whom many of them had met or seen during the desert campaigns. But by the end of that unforgettable afternoon the four of us felt that we had been fully adopted by these gentlemen as honorary members of the Afrika Korps. (Not something that happens every day) Fun Footnote: the very next day we were all arrested for driving a car with 'bad brakes' into Switzerland - the German Taunus! Different day, different culture. But that's a story for another time ....
@ericharris7699
@ericharris7699 2 года назад
Great story....thanks for sharing that!
@christiandemarco4699
@christiandemarco4699 2 года назад
Please tell us the rest of the story!
@drstrangelove4998
@drstrangelove4998 2 года назад
That is a fantastic story, thanks for sharing. I have met German vets in the past, and can concur!
@Benjamin-md9xx
@Benjamin-md9xx 2 года назад
Great story, thanks for sharing
@ahbarahad3203
@ahbarahad3203 2 года назад
damn bro you have lived an adventurous life
@Guadalajara1937
@Guadalajara1937 2 года назад
*killing Rommel* The Desert Fox: "Fine,guess I'll have to do it myself"
@moarliekmirite
@moarliekmirite 2 года назад
Rommel: well I'm somewhat a killer of Rommel myself
@leonardobastarrachea3058
@leonardobastarrachea3058 2 года назад
why I always end up finding you in all the videos I watch 👁️👄👁️
@wyattpeterson6286
@wyattpeterson6286 2 года назад
That's in poor taste, friend.
@M167A1
@M167A1 2 года назад
@@wyattpeterson6286 a bit perhaps, but I believe the general would appreciate the humor.
@Guadalajara1937
@Guadalajara1937 2 года назад
@@leonardobastarrachea3058 because youtube reccomends content based on who we are subscribed to and the type of videos we watch. Apparently alot of Hoi4 RU-vidrs watch this channel
@bobbym4811
@bobbym4811 2 года назад
Man I love the videos this guy does. Everything is top notch, and there's always historical facts that I've never heard of before. Thanks Mr. Felton
@scottschaeffer8920
@scottschaeffer8920 2 года назад
It’s the most fascinating period in our history. I never tire of learning about it. Thanks Mark!!!
@refugeeca
@refugeeca 2 года назад
Mark Felton: "I'm sure this will trigger a lively debate in the comment section" Comment Section: "Wow. Much information. Many thanks"
@jeffmoore2351
@jeffmoore2351 2 года назад
And How,
@B20C0
@B20C0 2 года назад
Because Mark's format is too long for the angry mob. Also he's awesome and does his homework really, really well.
@fromulus
@fromulus 2 года назад
@@B20C0 when he made that comment it was in regard to an unknown, a what if that we couldn't ever know, because it wasn't allowed to play out.
@edwelndiobel1567
@edwelndiobel1567 2 года назад
@@B20C0 How dare you! Oh well Im too tired to argue. Tea perhaps?
@christopherwright8811
@christopherwright8811 2 года назад
@@B20C0 I second that! Very interesting each time.
@rmassey1965
@rmassey1965 2 года назад
Note that Rommel’s home was actually in Herrlingen-Blaustein just outside of Ulm. He committed suicide not far from there on a spot overlooking the valley below. His grave is in the town’s cemetery, not far from the entrance to the church building there. There is also a museum to Rommel in that town’s old school house, that I can highly recommend.
@NuisanceMan
@NuisanceMan 2 года назад
Ulm? You mean, the home of Johann Gambolputty de von Ausfern-schplenden-schlitter-crasscrenbon-fried-digger-dingle-dangle-dongle-dungle-burstein-von-knacker-thrasher-apple-banger-horowitz-ticolensic-grander-knotty-spelltinkle-grandlich-grumblemeyer-spelterwasser-kurstlich-himbleeisen-bahnwagen-gutenabend-bitte-ein-nürnburger-bratwustle-gerspurten-mitzweimache-luber-hundsfut-gumberaber-shönendanker-kalbsfleisch-mittler-aucher von Hautkopft?
@thelakeman5207
@thelakeman5207 2 года назад
A great General, forced to commit suicide by Hitler for being accused of being part of the plot to kill Hitler. I think, had he lived, he may have had his life spared by the allies.
@mustafayldrm3449
@mustafayldrm3449 2 года назад
I was keep seeing "Rommel Bau" signs on Stuttgart. It was probably the biggest construction company in the area, also Stuttgart is pretty close to Ulm... Are those guys actually son/relative of the Erwin Rommel ? Do you have any info on that?
@michaellevan4346
@michaellevan4346 2 года назад
He was a general and fought hitler on many occasions and was part of Hitler's assassination attempt after he found out about killing of people in the camps
@georgebuller1914
@georgebuller1914 2 года назад
@@NuisanceMan Golly - what great Gobbledegook! I actually wasted a few seconds of my life reading it. Congratulations, in my eyes, you win "Gormo of the year!"...
@marksimpson5767
@marksimpson5767 2 года назад
Rommel was brilliant and had empathy. Another amazing historical video by Mark Felton.
@VinceNeil-sg9nq
@VinceNeil-sg9nq 7 месяцев назад
Dr.Feltons productions are second to none. Thank You for all of your dedication and hard work.
@NOTJustANomad
@NOTJustANomad 2 года назад
I went to the small village in southern Germany during a Christmas trip and visited Rommels grave as well as the hill where he as taken to before he swallowed the poison. It was a beautiful and peaceful place with a memorial stone explaining the story of his death. I spent a good 20 minutes under the tree next to this stone. There are flowers and wreath sent by military units from the British Army. There were some locals passing by and they all said hello. It was a beautiful afternoon.
@jbuckley2546
@jbuckley2546 2 года назад
You paint a fine picture.
@stargazer1744
@stargazer1744 2 года назад
The Brits always had a sort of admiring respect towards Rommel...even during the North Africa campaign, Churchill referred to him in the House of Commons as "a great general", and just 5 years after the war's end they made a remarkable movie about him called "The desert fox", starring the Brit actor James Mason, and based upon a bestselling book with the same name written by a former 8th Army soldier captured by the Afrika Korps who got to see the Field-Marshall in the desert.
@johnofypres
@johnofypres 2 года назад
Very good indeed. I had the same plan but the Covid foolishness has put it on hold for now.
@martenikaeltheroy3621
@martenikaeltheroy3621 2 года назад
They said Hello, and you heiled Hitler back ?
@ireneuszpyc6684
@ireneuszpyc6684 2 года назад
@@stargazer1744
@DMCS1917
@DMCS1917 2 года назад
I’m not even a full minute in, but I can already tell this is going to be a good one mark.
@ipadair7345
@ipadair7345 2 года назад
same
@BoneistJ
@BoneistJ 2 года назад
In all fairness, has Mark really ever made a bad one?
@pierevojzola9737
@pierevojzola9737 2 года назад
Hi, I had a feeling that there was going to be a bad ending to this storey!
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 2 года назад
It's a Felton Production
@RockmasterVideos
@RockmasterVideos 2 года назад
Mark is the Best, my Son told me about him & now I subscribed to him......Brilliant videos as always from Mark.
@tomlee432
@tomlee432 Год назад
I've read Rommels book on tanks in warfare. I've read some books by Patton and Montgomery as well. These men took warfare to a different level. But you can clearly understand their honor and respect for ones enemies. Very few of Hitler's general's had this. Statistician, soldier , and gentlemen all. Brings a few modern generals we have had to mind as well. May he rest in peace.
@barriebaldwinclod8974
@barriebaldwinclod8974 2 года назад
Always pleasant to watch your videos with your sane, well explained and unsensational commentry - rather rare these days.
@Ewen6177
@Ewen6177 2 года назад
And now Ladies and Gents, the weekend can begin. Cheers all from Speybay, Scotland.
@alex123castro
@alex123castro 2 года назад
Cheers from cape cod Massachusetts mate
@jamesbrackett575
@jamesbrackett575 2 года назад
Cheers from Panama City Florida laddie
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647
@cornbreadfedkirkpatrick9647 2 года назад
Clinck
@harryscott2768
@harryscott2768 2 года назад
Cheers from Airth, Forth Valley, Scotland.
@societyreborn33
@societyreborn33 2 года назад
Cheers from Oahu!
@walboyfredo6025
@walboyfredo6025 2 года назад
15:21 l recall the 50th anniversary of his "death" , the modern German Army laid a reef on his tomestone plus survivors of the British 8th Army also laid a reef. In the end both groups saluted his grave. That's respect big time.
@RobMacKendrick
@RobMacKendrick 2 года назад
Wreath.
@sydpotter
@sydpotter 2 года назад
The word is "wreath", not "reef"!
@questionreality6003
@questionreality6003 2 года назад
Thanks for this. Great for you to bring it to light here. ER was a great man. In the Desert Campaign, a Canadian doctor who was there told me he'd come to the Allies' camps to check on his captured troops to see if they were o.k., then exchanging niceties, then simply go back to his side.
@roostersbays95
@roostersbays95 2 года назад
Australians also respected him...
@NesconProductions
@NesconProductions 2 года назад
@@williambodin5359 Have heard that there are those who lay reef(er) on Jim Hendrix's tomb. But that's another tomb all together.
@ikechukwuamaku1144
@ikechukwuamaku1144 5 месяцев назад
So explicit and accurate in details, Mark Felton you are the best.
@bartolomediazsahagun472
@bartolomediazsahagun472 Год назад
As always, a superb Felton documentary, concise, balanced and extremely well delivered. Bravo! Rommel was an extraordinary military and human figure.
@ProudMarineVet0311
@ProudMarineVet0311 2 года назад
Field Marshal Rommel is an icon to this day. A man of courage and respect. A great tactician that we as Marines came to respect years after his death. “Be an example to your men, in your duty and private life. Never spare yourself, and let the troops see that you don’t in your endurance of fatigue and privation. Always be tactful and well-mannered and teach your subordinates to do the same. Avoid excessive sharpness or harshness of voice, which usually indicates the man who has shortcomings of his own to hide. -Erwin Rommel.
@KB-us3pz
@KB-us3pz 2 года назад
Rommel won many of his victories with Italian troops.Also ,a lot of his early successes in N. Africa were due to an excellent source of information provided by Italian intelligence.Rommel called it "the good source". Once this wealth of information dried up, he began to lose.
@josephryan9230
@josephryan9230 2 года назад
@@KB-us3pz Interesting. Thanks for sharing that. So often the work of intelligence gets overlooked, taken for granted, or even ignored, such as in Operation Market Garden. The 1/7th Cavalry was sent into the IA Drang Valley with little to no intelligence on enemy forces located there and only survived due to the extensive close air support that was available to them.
@roygardiner2229
@roygardiner2229 2 года назад
That speaks volumes about the character of the man. I would have liked him as a boss.
@condedooku9750
@condedooku9750 2 года назад
@@josephryan9230 Rommel also committed war crimes and was an ardent Nazi, but I suppose people like the Rommel of Allied and German propaganda better than the real Rommel. "Newer research has exposed Wehrmacht war crimes in North Africa. This opposes the term "War without hate" which is used by some authors to describe the North African Campaign.[95] Giordana Terracina writes that: "On April 3, the Italians recaptured Benghazi and a few months later the Afrika Korps led by Rommel was sent to Libya and began the deportation of the Jews of Cyrenaica in the concentration camp of Giado and other smaller towns in Tripolitania. This measure was accompanied by shooting, also in Benghazi, of some Jews guilty of having welcomed the British troops, on their arrival, treating them as liberators."[96] Jews from all around Cyrenaica and Benghazi were deported into Italy for forced labour. At the Giado concentration camp, a survivor by the name of Sion Burbea testifies that he witnessed Erwin Rommel inspecting their work at the camp.[97] Some historians directly connect Rommel with the war crimes of the Wehrmacht in North Africa. According to German historian Wolfgang Proske, Rommel forbade his soldiers from buying anything from the Jewish population of Tripoli, used Jewish slave labour and commanded Jews to clear out minefields by walking on them ahead of his forces.[98] Proske also claims that Jews in Tripoli were later sent to Concentration Camps.[99] The Wehrmacht's persecution of Jews continued into 1942. According to the publication Jewish Communities of the World edited by Anthony Lerman, in 1942 during the German occupation, the Benghazi quarter that housed the Jewish population was plundered and 2000 Jews were deported across the desert, out of which circa a fifth of them had perished.[100] Jews in Benghazi were also victims of a pogrom in 1942 [101] The Moment Magazine reports: "on orders from the German military commander, the Axis forces, in 1942, plundered Jewish shops and deported 2,600 Benghazi Jews to Giado".[102] Robert Satloff writes in his book Among the Righteous: Lost Stories from the Holocaust's Long Reach into Arab Lands that as the German and Italian forces retreated across Libya towards Tunisia, the Jewish population became victims upon which they released their anger and frustration. According to Satloff, Afrika Korps soldiers plundered Jewish property all along the Libyan coast. This violence and persecution only came to an end with the arrival of General Montgomery in Tripoli on January 23, 1943.[103] German historian Clemens Vollnhals writes that the use of Jews by Afrika Korps as forced labour is barely known, but it did happen alongside persecution of Jewish population (although on smaller scale than in Europe) and some of the labourers were worked to death.[104] The persecution of Jews by the Wehrmacht continued into Tunisia. According to several historians, allegations and stories that associate Rommel and the Afrika Korps with the harassing and plundering of Jewish gold and property in Tunisia are usually known under the name "Rommel's treasure" or "Rommel's gold".[105][106][107] Other historians, however, state that Rommel had nothing to do with the treasure, and that "Rauff's treasure would be a more appropriate name.[108][109] When the Wehrmacht entered Tunisia, they ordered the establishment of a Judenrat and Jews were subject to forced labour.[110] 2,000 Jewish men were forcefully conscripted, and a few thousand more would be conscripted later on. This forced labour was used in extremely dangerous situations near targets of bombing raids, facing hunger and violence.[111]"
@downwithputinsaveukraine1313
@downwithputinsaveukraine1313 2 года назад
I've never met a single historian or lifetime officer or GI who has spoken badly of him.
@LiebeNachDland
@LiebeNachDland 2 года назад
I had heard of beforehand what happened to the general, but not those disturbing details of how it came to be in the end. Those last few minutes were quite sad, in a way. Another excellent video. This was probably my favorite video of yours highlighting those of higher command.
@johnt.4947
@johnt.4947 2 года назад
I agree Nicholas. I didn't know about the choices he was offered, but really there was only one to choose.
@matthewlok3020
@matthewlok3020 2 года назад
I can hear the same sort of sad feeling from Dr Felton himself from his tone at the end of the clip
@robv1953
@robv1953 2 года назад
Rommel was considered to be a highly regarded tank Commander, with the Panzer tank at his behest, his Afrika Corp was considered the top in WW2, then they had him killed for an unfound treason.
@ktipuss
@ktipuss 2 года назад
@@johnt.4947 Historian William Shirer covers that in his book "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich". Curiously, Shirer states that Von Rundstedt said that he did not know about this arrangement until he heard Keitel's evidence in the dock at Nuremberg.
@DeclanMBrennan
@DeclanMBrennan 2 года назад
James Mason plays this scene with great pathos in "The Desert Fox"
@cristian7051
@cristian7051 2 года назад
Mark Felton, great knowledge, great clips... thank you for sharing your knowledge with us.
@melvinmayfield470
@melvinmayfield470 2 года назад
Have seen excerpts of your work previously sir. Once again, you do not disappoint; here-here!!
@Dr.VonBraun
@Dr.VonBraun 2 года назад
The fact that the German Amry has an Army base bearing his name to this day shows you what kind of man and Leader he was, and how well respectd he is to this very day. Great documentary. Rommel was a good man in a very bad situation.
@mikeryan3701
@mikeryan3701 2 года назад
Also, the German Navy had a destroyer (1970-1999) named after Rommel.
@condedooku9750
@condedooku9750 2 года назад
If Rommel were truly a good man he would not commit war crimes or support the Nazi cause fervently.
@jakublulek3261
@jakublulek3261 2 года назад
When you look into this topic, you find many other German Army officers who were in the same situation. That was also the reason why not many of them were sentenced to death in Nurenberg.
@condedooku9750
@condedooku9750 2 года назад
@@jakublulek3261 Rather, they were left alone to allow the myth of the clean Whermacht to spread.
@jakublulek3261
@jakublulek3261 2 года назад
@@condedooku9750 That was another reason. But considering West Germany needed experience army officers, Western Allies let it slide.
@douglasturner6153
@douglasturner6153 2 года назад
The movie "The Desert Fox" starring James Mason as Rommel came out around 1954. Many of Rommel's former subordinate Officers were asked their opinions of the portrayal. Their main observation was: "Much too polite"! Apparently Rommel was a very brusque and demanding leader.
@demef758
@demef758 2 года назад
I'm not surprised. You didn't rise to the top of the ranks, particularly the German Army, without being an SOB, at a minimum.
@tamilly7941
@tamilly7941 2 года назад
Rommel was a nice man with his subordinates, but he was very demanding to his peers superiors and his inmediate subordinates.
@scottpeters371
@scottpeters371 2 года назад
@@tamilly7941 Not to mention any Italians he was around. He had very little respect for the Italian Army
@freedomisslavery6840
@freedomisslavery6840 2 года назад
@@scottpeters371 Can you blame him?
@tamilly7941
@tamilly7941 2 года назад
@@scottpeters371 Well, he was a good man with his Italian forces, of course he didn't respected an army who was whiped from every campaign, but thanks to Rommel they even fought the tank vs tank against the British and manage to win by the first time at the Battle of Bir El Gubri
@elviramcintosh9878
@elviramcintosh9878 2 года назад
well done, thanks for the program.
@onemorevalyrian7188
@onemorevalyrian7188 2 года назад
What an amazing presentation, thank you for time and effort!
@TheHeartlessFour
@TheHeartlessFour 2 года назад
Rommel: "Your plan is bad." Rundstedt: "No. Your plan is bad." Hitler: "Hold my Beer stein"
@fearofmusic1312
@fearofmusic1312 2 года назад
Hitler was abstainer (and vegetarian).
@SonicPoetryIII
@SonicPoetryIII 2 года назад
@@fearofmusic1312 but was drugged up by his doctor daily. ''Hold my syringe''
@archstanton6102
@archstanton6102 2 года назад
@@fearofmusic1312 What point are you making? He also caused one of the largest genocides
@dxcpt
@dxcpt 2 года назад
@@archstanton6102 You just answered a fact, with another fact, which had no relevance at all xD
@archstanton6102
@archstanton6102 2 года назад
@@dxcpt I know that. I am trying to work out his 1st point, as to some they may be seen as him stating Hitler had good points.
@joeylandry4933
@joeylandry4933 2 года назад
Back in the late 80’s I was a patrolman in a small southern Virginia town. We had a WW2 veteran who was part of operation Torch, Mr Orange was his name. He operated the town gas pumps for all the town police vehicles and I loved hearing him talk about seeing Patton and the respect that he had for Rommel.
@Sturminfantrist
@Sturminfantrist 2 года назад
"My Name is Joe Roberts i work for the State..........."
@mansuetobadionurbangardene1748
@mansuetobadionurbangardene1748 2 года назад
Authentic documentary with real personages without using stand-in actors. Kudos to you Mark. Love and kisses from the Philippines ❤️🇵🇭.
@philipthonemann2524
@philipthonemann2524 2 года назад
A very interesting, well-presented, documentary. Thanks for your work!
@15-Peter-20
@15-Peter-20 2 года назад
One of German's greatest generals of all time. Secondly dr Mark felton Britain's best history teacher of all time.
@johnbrereton5229
@johnbrereton5229 2 года назад
Rommel is a long way from being one of the greatest General of all time, even in Germany. Many of his victories appeared spectacular but in reality lacked substance. Because he failed to realise the importance of objectives and logistics. In fact Rommels image as a great general was created by the Nazi protagonist Joseph Goebbels and many of the photographs we now have of him looking like a film star on the battle field were actually posed to create this myth.
@cricketerfrench7501
@cricketerfrench7501 2 года назад
@@johnbrereton5229 To be fair it also suited the British to say how good he was as they beat him.
@annalisette5897
@annalisette5897 2 года назад
My husband, who was much older than me, knew one of General Rommel's drivers who had moved to Southern California. My husband had some driving lessons with him and passed some of those lessons on to me. I have always had the idea that General Rommel was a decent human being much admired by his troops and by the people.
@rooseveltdarbey9493
@rooseveltdarbey9493 2 года назад
Wow the stories he must have
@flitsertheo
@flitsertheo 2 года назад
One of the lessons must have been "how to avoid strafing airplanes".
@TheDudiest3Dude
@TheDudiest3Dude 2 года назад
So in a way, you were trained by the Desert fox!
@annalisette5897
@annalisette5897 2 года назад
@@TheDudiest3Dude Yes!
@biz4twobiz463
@biz4twobiz463 2 года назад
a decent human being?? He was a Nazi Field Marshal during WW2. No such thing as decent.
@marcioreis2648
@marcioreis2648 2 года назад
Thank you Mark for such an enlightening part of History. It's unfortunately that we don't see this kind of Honor and respect nowadays .
@power4things
@power4things 2 месяца назад
Dr. Felton is the best. Incredible facts, uncanny photos, smooth presentation and good speaking voice.
@AgencyIsland
@AgencyIsland 2 года назад
Rommel got my respect when he buried a commando officer who was sent to kill him with full military honors. Say what you want about who he fought for, but that man understood the meaning of honor
@ccrider3435
@ccrider3435 2 года назад
Do you comprehend the crimes he assisted with, defended and presided over? Crimes like murder, torture, terror, rape, theft, eco obliteration and genocide. nazi is as nazi does.
@andrewbates6840
@andrewbates6840 2 года назад
@@ccrider3435 Please stop with the dramatics.
@AgencyIsland
@AgencyIsland 2 года назад
@@ccrider3435 need i remind you of the bombing of Dresden, a city targeted by the british specifically to cause mass loss of civilian life? most of these "atrocities" you speak of were committed by foriegn ost-legions, majority of them were committed by the Estonian SS, not 1 general lol
@wwta
@wwta 2 года назад
@@ccrider3435 Rommel never was a Nazi party member. He was one of the v few soldiers who did not join the party despite INTENSE pressure to do so. Easy to judge from a keyboard.
@paul5475
@paul5475 2 года назад
Just think about why German Civilians was so happy when Allies won the war. Yes people in germany seen Allies as liberators against Nazi. Remember Nazi didn't came to power or hitler by an election. Hitler didn't win in the Election nor his Party. For many germans Nazi is not Germany and also.. Not all Nazi are germans only there's a lot of Nationality that are Part of Nazi despite not even Germans. There are even NAZI in america during the heights of war in europe
@tinkeringinthailand8147
@tinkeringinthailand8147 2 года назад
My grandfather fought against Rommel in North Africa, he had a great deal of respect for him.
@gmandersonjr
@gmandersonjr 2 года назад
He hated Hitler
@glockfanboy4927
@glockfanboy4927 2 года назад
The desert 🦊🏝️
@kendodd8734
@kendodd8734 2 года назад
Rommel was first and foremost a soldier from everything I’ve seen and read about him he just unfortunately for him had a man at the helm that was embittered egotistical bigoted non negotiable leader that had no respect for life including his own German people the day he did the only option open to him for me says everything about the substance of the man he fought hard in that war but shouldn’t all soldiers reguardless of what side ur on but like I said before from what I’ve read he fought fair ( not easy in a war ) where revenge is ever lingering in the background for me he seems to have been an honourable man that would have been an asset to any army of any nation in a conflict he cared for his own men and pows which tells me the was no malice in him he was just a soldier soldering
@maxsmith3894
@maxsmith3894 2 года назад
@@kendodd8734 very good Statement, I agree 200%. to bad there were not more like him!
@najdaraj9420
@najdaraj9420 2 года назад
My old man did as well.....Libya and Egypt 1939 through '45. He had huge respect for Rommel but ironically wasn't too keen on Montgomery! :)
@micsunday14
@micsunday14 11 месяцев назад
What an incredibly interesting story. You are our window into this time Mark, thank you again
@carrie668
@carrie668 Год назад
What a great documentary presentation. Thank you. I heard many stories about the desert fox and like Rommel, he was a very talented commander.
@GhostRanger5060
@GhostRanger5060 2 года назад
Rommel's death has always haunted me. What the allied troops of two World Wars could never do, the secret police of his own people did. Suicide is such a horrible punishment for a man of genuine patriotism and professional integrity. Rommel was no saint but he didn't deserve to die as he did, except that his political enemies were petty men, extremely envious of his military prowess and heroic popularity. Probably the greatest compliment a man can receive is the respect of his battlefield enemies. Rommel certainly had that. Thank you for posting this.
@bufnyfan1
@bufnyfan1 2 года назад
General Rommel deeply loved his wife and son and didn't want any harm to come to them so when offered the chance to protect his family he chose suicide (I believe the story goes (from William Shrier's book-the Rise and Fall of the Third Reich) that he was provided cyanide capsules and he was given a full military funeral after this
@Nate-fh7fh
@Nate-fh7fh 2 года назад
There's a monument to Charlie Fox at a roundabout in my town of London, Ontario. He was killed in a car crash in 2008.
@Lerxstification
@Lerxstification 2 года назад
Ironic.
@adrielsebastian5216
@adrielsebastian5216 2 года назад
@Andy Man I remember too that James Jabara, the first US jet ace, also died in a car wreck.
@MyDogmatix
@MyDogmatix 2 года назад
Canada wins again. Punching above our weight! First the Red Baron then Rommel. Too bad no one tasked a Canadian to take out the Ol’nosestacio’d one himself. It would’ve been a classic “pack yer bags fella’s, wars over” situation.
@SWATT101
@SWATT101 2 года назад
@Andy Man Trudy or Trudope... actually
@JohnDrakeMI6
@JohnDrakeMI6 2 года назад
Mark Felton's research is by far the best of most any other researchers. I'v talked to a few German officers and.or Pilots i.e. Heinrich Rupp and heard many stories. I am former U.S. Secret Service and enjoy many types of similar research subjects and the coverups handled even today. Keep up the excellent work !! I'd like to see more on the Gestapo snd the Gestapo Disc's carried like Badges of today. I also collect such items.
@kustom4935
@kustom4935 2 года назад
Your videos are amazing. Thank you, sincerely.
@stewartmackay
@stewartmackay 2 года назад
Fantastic video. I had an older father (although when young I didn't realise that). He fought Rommel's men in the North African campaign. In 1947 he left the army & joined the police in Scotland. He was a serious man, with a lot on his mind. Now that I'm in my 50's I can completely understand why, although again, I didn't understand these things as a kid. All i have to do is watch footage of the battle of El Alamein & his seriousness in life becomes clear to me. incidentally, he said "Montgomery was an arrogant, self-centered git" - I remember that. I think my father had more admiration for Rommel than he did for Monty. Thank you for your work on this video.
@user-njyzcip
@user-njyzcip 2 года назад
Grass is always greener on the other side...
@colintalbot3787
@colintalbot3787 2 года назад
Rommel was admired and respected by many allied troop who did not have the same respect for Monty.
@stewartmackay
@stewartmackay 2 года назад
@@user-njyzcip Meaning what?
@watching99134
@watching99134 2 года назад
Perhaps your father had a Scottish antipathy towards the English, as part of it?
@stewartmackay
@stewartmackay 2 года назад
@@watching99134 So you are assuming that because he was Scottish he was anti-English? If you are, you're wrong. He was in the British Army & proud of it.
@Imafed42069
@Imafed42069 2 года назад
I broke my leg last week and just resting. Seeing this notification made my day! Thanks for all you do I look forward to this one
@MarkFeltonProductions
@MarkFeltonProductions 2 года назад
Get well soon!
@osamabinladen824
@osamabinladen824 2 года назад
@@MarkFeltonProductions Is World War 2 era your main focus? Can you do 1980s onwards? I'd like to hear your take about my friend Saddam.
@zacharypayne4080
@zacharypayne4080 2 года назад
@@osamabinladen824 I want only ww11 videos..views would drop if he did that @Mark Felton productions
@Imafed42069
@Imafed42069 2 года назад
@@MarkFeltonProductions thank you so much! :) you're the best
@ewellfaul7026
@ewellfaul7026 2 года назад
Thanks for the videos you do, Dr. Felton. Your videos are the most learned and comprehensive that I've come across. I've watched hundreds of WWII documentaries, and I enjoy yours the most. What I like in particular are the ones where you explore remote topics that are rarely touched on by other sources. Like more information and explanation on the Me 262. If Hitler had developed and committed to it, he had a chance of winning the war, in my view.
@robertleigh559
@robertleigh559 2 года назад
Wonderful look behind the scenes of WWII, all helping to understand what really happened. Fascinating and succinct. Thank you.
@sm25550
@sm25550 2 года назад
“It is always a bad sign … when scapegoats are habitually sought out and brought to sacrifice for every conceivable mistake. It usually shows something is wrong in the very highest command. It completely inhibits the willingness of junior commanders to make decisions, for they will always try to get chapter and verse for every thing they do, finishing up with a miserable piece.” - Erwin Rommel
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 2 года назад
Brilliant!
@rogerlebaron
@rogerlebaron 2 года назад
probably the only of hitler’s generals/field marshals that has any sort of enduring post war respect. fortunately for the allies he travelled to paris on the eve of d-day to celebrate his wife’s 50th birthday. this contributed to the delay in re-deploying panzer divisions from calais to normandy & the rest is history…..
@Fiberous_Pulley
@Fiberous_Pulley 2 года назад
Manstien was well respected too
@martyfeldman3269
@martyfeldman3269 2 года назад
He could only ever hope to stretch out the inevitable defeat. He knew this. It was all over.
@Juhani96
@Juhani96 2 года назад
@@Fiberous_Pulley manstein* :)
@jboss119
@jboss119 2 года назад
@@martyfeldman3269 he was the head of hitlers personal bodyguard and happily went along. The fondness by people to him is shocking to me.
@Saleh-994
@Saleh-994 2 года назад
@@Fiberous_Pulley his defense of the wehrmacht cost him much of the respect the allies had for him
@matthewbratton3825
@matthewbratton3825 Год назад
Well done again Mr.Felton!
@kyawlwin6195
@kyawlwin6195 2 года назад
Very valuable documentary clip. Thank you!
@sussy_6998
@sussy_6998 2 года назад
This is the type of history channel that should be on the "History" channel.
@denisegore1884
@denisegore1884 2 года назад
The "History" channel is for simple folk who want entertainment, not education.
@DaytonaStation
@DaytonaStation 2 года назад
@@denisegore1884 the History Channel is a joke.
@montbrehain
@montbrehain 2 года назад
100% !
@lsq7833
@lsq7833 2 года назад
The photograph from the place where Rommel's staff car was shot up isn't entirely accurate. I lived VERY close to this place. In the background of the road you can see a glimpse of the red brick guardian house where first aid was first administered. His car was traveling toward the camera and crashed at the very limit of the border between Ornes and Calvados. While he was indeed on land belonging to the small commune of Ste Foy de Montgomery, it was actually closest to the town of Vimoutiers which had been razed to the ground by allied bombings apparently as a mistake (zero german presence in town). You can see the town exit roadsign on the photograph in fact. For that reason they had to double back from where they came from to a pharmacy in Livarot about a dozen kilometers away. Funfact, the pharmacy where he was given emergency treatment still has the table on which he was laid.
@barrysheridan9186
@barrysheridan9186 2 года назад
Thanks for that information, it is often surprising what these channels prompt.
@kiickinballistics
@kiickinballistics 2 года назад
Ste Foy de Montgomery fits the story better of course. As with Flight Lieutenant Charley Fox.
@AgencyIsland
@AgencyIsland 2 года назад
Imagine in 80 years how much the table will be worth
@stuartlawsonbeattie1411
@stuartlawsonbeattie1411 2 года назад
Aha, a grand table fit for a feast no less.
@hannah2278
@hannah2278 2 года назад
This is why you read comments on a Mark Felton video
@TheSaltydog07
@TheSaltydog07 Год назад
Thank you, as ever, Dr. Felton. I'm off to read the fascinating comments.
@ryan-pf9ud
@ryan-pf9ud Год назад
You’re a gift to the internet. Thank you Mark.
@historywithhilbert146
@historywithhilbert146 2 года назад
Great video as always!
@smiley.6534
@smiley.6534 2 года назад
U maakt zeer goede videos! :)
@beggar1415
@beggar1415 2 года назад
@Prince Harambe so true
@jeffblacky
@jeffblacky 2 года назад
My great grand uncles served with Afrika Corps. One was a loader on a anti aircraft gun and the other was a officer in a transport company shipping supplies to all the combat units
@Ko.Wi.
@Ko.Wi. 2 года назад
Sind die noch am leben ?
@borleyboo5613
@borleyboo5613 2 года назад
A man of honour and bravery. He was respected by his own men and the allies. Even Winston Churchill paid tribute to him on his (Rommel’s) death. Rommel is one of my heroes. The film, ‘The Desert Fox’ with James Mason as Field Marshal Rommel is very good.
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Год назад
I just watched " The Desert Fox’ with James Mason, a very good film!!
@Miamcoline
@Miamcoline 2 года назад
Really good video. Always wanted to know the exact context, involvement and circumstances. Thanks a lot for this!
@Janszler
@Janszler 2 года назад
"Carl-Heinrich von Stülpnagel" has to be the most german of german generals' names...
@11Kralle
@11Kralle 2 года назад
There are some names from WW1 that are hilariously more german...
@glaslynx123
@glaslynx123 2 года назад
Enter stage right , General Erich Von Klinkerhoffen
@neveniusvondubowatz7705
@neveniusvondubowatz7705 2 года назад
@@glaslynx123 KLAP!
@bgtcsjm
@bgtcsjm 2 года назад
He might not be a general, but there's this guy named Baron Helmut Schnitzelnazi.
@GopaiCheems
@GopaiCheems 2 года назад
@@bgtcsjm got that reference🤣
@DarkMatterX1
@DarkMatterX1 2 года назад
An educated man with a posh-ish British accent say "Rub him out" has got to be one of the greatest things I've ever heard.
@moarliekmirite
@moarliekmirite 2 года назад
No one: Mark Felton: Rommel's brilliance peaked when he killed the elusive General Erwin Rommel
@vonfragesq7145
@vonfragesq7145 2 года назад
In Edward G. Robinsons voice "We're gonna rub him out.......See!"
@thomasmarciano6133
@thomasmarciano6133 2 года назад
Read the book The Desert Fox by Brigadier Desmond Young, who was captured by the Afrika Korps in North Africa. Tragic on so many levels...
@DarkMatterX1
@DarkMatterX1 2 года назад
@@vonfragesq7145 Dude, _EXACTLY!_
@KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking
@KathrynsWorldWildfireTracking 2 года назад
@@vonfragesq7145 N'yeah!
@sudetenrider-pili6637
@sudetenrider-pili6637 2 года назад
Quality of this content is almost god tier. Thank you
@mikesummers6880
@mikesummers6880 2 года назад
My uncle was in the African korps and met him once or twice and he said he was decent man . My uncle was captured in Al emayne and then shipped to Canada 🇨🇦 after the war he was shipped to England to work the land and help after the war before he was released, it was in England that he met his wife a English girl from Leicestershire and he ended up staying in England as he had nothing to go back to his home was now part of Poland.
@donl1846
@donl1846 2 года назад
General George Patton also had much respect for Rommel as well. The information contain in this video by Professor Felton is the best and most accurate regarding the end of Rommel.
@rohiths3554
@rohiths3554 2 года назад
Obviously. He was the one who said 'we fought the wrong enemy' .
@user-jz5dz5nv2i
@user-jz5dz5nv2i 2 года назад
Рускийязыкдпвайдааайдавай за не
@jimmcdonald7863
@jimmcdonald7863 2 года назад
After years of reading the history of World War II and the life of Field Marshall Rommel, I want to add a thought here regarding his death. I agree with with Dr. Felton conclusions here. Rommel agreed with those who felt Hitler had made bad decisions during the war. He agreed to take poision to end his life and to protect and save his family. What a gallant decision he made.
@tomloft2000
@tomloft2000 2 года назад
you might call it "heroic" in the true sense of the word.
@Kodakcompactdisc
@Kodakcompactdisc 2 года назад
Imagine Rommels reaction when he heard about operation Barbarossa. The war was lost that day.
@ramakrishnannatarajan6047
@ramakrishnannatarajan6047 2 года назад
When you r with Hitler you have no other option
@texaswunderkind
@texaswunderkind 2 года назад
The so-called "choice" offered to Rommel was: 1) take suicide pill, be celebrated as hero, and know that his family would be allowed to live, or 2) refuse, go through a show trial, at which point both he and his family will be tortured and murdered as traitors, with all property seized.
@roryobrien4401
@roryobrien4401 2 года назад
@@Kodakcompactdisc I think you're being a bit simplistic. You can't bring 2022 reasoning to 1941. Rommel was first and foremost a soldier, a loyal German soldier who depite his misgivings concluded that Hitler's management of the war in the West in 1940 was the work of genius. I imagine as time went on he became more aware of what Germany was going to be up against if the Russia and the United States came into the war and might have been a bit more circumspect in 1941 but he never saw the German army as a beaten docket by any means. The video makes it clear that Rommel questioned Hitler's handling of the war, not the war itself.
@birdsoup777
@birdsoup777 2 года назад
Thank you Mr. Felton. You make the best summary documentaries, God Bless Freedom and Historians who tell the truth.
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Год назад
Thank you Mr. Felton., I love this WW2 channel and I have a new respect for E Rommel,
@Scottirulez
@Scottirulez 2 года назад
Rommel one of those dudes who can really rock a visor cap
@johnsmith1474
@johnsmith1474 2 года назад
He looks like a weasel.
@captainpinky8307
@captainpinky8307 2 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 weasels are dangerous creatures.
@Ulvetann
@Ulvetann 2 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 Never underestimate a weasel. They get in where people say it is impossible to get in.
@cl570
@cl570 2 года назад
@@johnsmith1474 Weasels kill for fun, like they murder dozens of rodents.. for fun. lol.
@drewizkoollikeicecre
@drewizkoollikeicecre 2 года назад
Felton productions outshine 95% of the “professionally” made documentaries. History nuts like myself could watch these all day. Wait…I do!!
@white_heat.truth76
@white_heat.truth76 Год назад
With one exception concerning Rommel's story. A lesser known Appalachian country boy named Jerry Skinner.
@drewizkoollikeicecre
@drewizkoollikeicecre Год назад
@@white_heat.truth76 I’ll look him up. Thanks.
@Articulate99
@Articulate99 2 года назад
Always interesting, thank you.
@jamesbrown9736
@jamesbrown9736 10 месяцев назад
Dr Felton, another piece of documentary brilliance. Your lectures are fantastic Sir. Semper Fidelis SSgt B.
@chrismacdonald2160
@chrismacdonald2160 2 года назад
Best History Channel on RU-vid! Not bothered by adverts, just well written narrating, clear videos and informative info! What more can you ask for! Well done Mark
@alitlweird
@alitlweird 2 года назад
The more I learn about Rommel, the more I respect and admire him. But that Hitler guy… now _THAT_ guy was a real jerk. (RIP, Norm MacDonald)
@CatskillsGrrl
@CatskillsGrrl 2 года назад
💯👏
@lold6130
@lold6130 Год назад
Love this channel!
@hotzgehotzge1610
@hotzgehotzge1610 2 года назад
Most respect for you to try to pronounce the german names as precisely as possible for a non native speaker! You are doing very well Mr Felton. Thanks
@tb7771
@tb7771 2 года назад
Been a more than avid ww2 buff for 40 years. I've known all of this information, yet Dr. Felton had me mesmerized and glued to my screen.
@rjwintl
@rjwintl 2 года назад
My Dad had seen elements of captured Panzers from Rommel’s Afrika Corps while at flight school in Texas during WW2 and said that those German prisoners were so disciplined and honorable that model prisoners were given a jail pass to attend dinner outside the camp with trusted Texas families and always returned to prison camp at the scheduled time … Washington DC never knew !!! … true story
@justincase01
@justincase01 2 года назад
Many of those same pow's remained in the states after the war.
@johnhildebrand3253
@johnhildebrand3253 2 года назад
My father told me a similar story. My grandfather had a farm in Manitoba and the German POWs worked the fields (hoeing beets) while their one guard napped in the barn.
@fredgarv79
@fredgarv79 2 года назад
yes I had read about this in camps in Atlanta,they were let out to do farmwork, and many of them wanted to stay after the war and did. Lucky lucky germans who were captured and sent to america. the ones captured and sent to russia, only like 1 out of 10 survived. you know it's funny, I talked to a woman who lived under the occupation of norway as a little girl, and asked her what was it like? and she said the germans were totally fine to them, it was the british who came in after who were undisciplined and drunk all the time. she actually liked the germans under the occupation more than the british when they were liberated. strange. course it was an entirely different story in the east..
@cmmguy99
@cmmguy99 2 года назад
Most Germans didnt want the war and were happy it was over.
@freibier
@freibier 2 года назад
@@cmmguy99 Nobody wants war, except for the weapons industry.
@juanarce6900
@juanarce6900 2 года назад
Thank you for such an amazing documentary.
@VIsuaLANomaLY
@VIsuaLANomaLY 2 года назад
You have a fantastic array of content, man….. this is one of your best!
@Hugh-Glass
@Hugh-Glass 2 года назад
This is the Mark Felton production I have been most wishing for. Much thanks
@jamesagnew929
@jamesagnew929 2 года назад
Fascinating insights Mark, as both my parents grew up during WW2 these extremely well researched and presented programs continue to inform and give some sense of closure on the horrors of this dark period of history. Thank you
@jcip1
@jcip1 2 года назад
Another well made and informative video...many thanks
@Hamjam117
@Hamjam117 2 года назад
Can't stop watching ur videos. Thank you
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